B Buckaroo said:
I don't read the letter from US Cycling (Stephen Hess) to USADA (William Bock), dated 17 August, 2012, as being all that supportive to either the UCI or Lance Armstrong.
In the paragraph where US Cycling appears to be telling USADA to back off, the issue is characterized as "that esoteric legal issue". When I read that, it suggests to me that what follows is being stated because Mr. Hess has to state this, but he doesn't have his heart into it.
In the next paragraph, Mr. Hess goes on to state his understanding that the USADA is asserting its jurisdiction can be anchored outside to the UCI's rules, and that US Cycling has no problems with that.
I tend to agree with some of what you've referred to, and after re-reading Hess' letter, think it's perhaps more equivocal than I first thought upon my initial reading. The last paragraph, as you note, is much more open to equivocation. In that last paragraph, Hess writes as follows:
"I understand USADA's assertion its jurisdiction can be anchored outside UCI's rules and the importation of those rules into USAC's governance. USAC does not intend the comments above to apply outside the scope of UCI's governance of doping as allocated by the WADA Code. USAC understands that several of the targets USADA has identified are not USA Cycling license holders, are outside USA Cycling's control, and it is not USAC's role to argue jurisdictional issues involving such parties. In addition,
USAC understands that there are substantial disagreements concerning whether USADA's charges involve test results over which UCI has jurisdiction, or involve violations that were discovered by USADA. USAC does not intend to express any opinion on thos arguments as USAC is not privy to any of the information on which a reasonable determination could be made, nor do any of the applicable rules even give USAC a role in adjudicating the jurisdictional issues at hand."
The last two sentences above seem to suggest that despite the seeming support for UCI's and Armstrong's position in the third paragraph at page 1 of Hess' letter (which relates to international cycling doping controls), UCAC is just not going to get behind UCI or USADA, one way or the other, when it comes to non-analytical enforcement proceedings. Indeed, the statement that USAC has no "role in adjudicating" the jurisdictional issue, while pretty much self-evident, also would seem to support USADA's position more so than it does Armstrong's in the final analysis.
Again, this is going to be a very interesting decision by Judge Sparks, no matter how it turns out.